Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Police chiefs embrace crisis response changes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2020 09:15 PM
  • Police chiefs embrace crisis response changes

Police chiefs say they support closer collaboration with crisis workers to help prevent tragedies when their officers confront people dealing with mental health issues.

Peel Regional Police Chief Nishan Duraiappah says sending two police officers to such calls allows only the option of transporting the person in need to a hospital.

He told MPs on the House of Commons public safety committee today that dispatching an officer and a crisis worker, on the other hand, allows the response team to get a better sense of what will help the person.

Waterloo Regional Police Service Chief Bryan Larkin says law enforcement agencies are criminalizing homelessness, addiction and other issues that should be dealt with in other ways through a model focused on public health.

Larkin, who is on the drug advisory committee of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, points to the association's recent call for the decriminalization of personal drug use as an example of a constructive approach.

The public safety committee is studying systemic racism in Canadian policing in response to widespread concern over how police treat Black and Indigenous people.

Photo courtesy of Missisauga News

MORE National ARTICLES

N.S. fugitive still at large: police

N.S. fugitive still at large: police
A Nova Scotia fugitive accused of stabbing a police sergeant, assaulting a woman and injuring a police dog remains at large.

N.S. fugitive still at large: police

N.S. premier defends mass shooting review process

N.S. premier defends mass shooting review process
Premier Stephen McNeil says if panellists leading a review into Nova Scotia's recent mass shooting need more powers, he expects they will request them from his government.

N.S. premier defends mass shooting review process

Woman pushed from train platform seriously hurt

Woman pushed from train platform seriously hurt
Police say a woman suffered serious injuries after being pushed onto the tracks in front of an oncoming train in New Westminster, B.C.

Woman pushed from train platform seriously hurt

Analysis of Ukraine flight black boxes complete

Analysis of Ukraine flight black boxes complete
Canada's Transportation Safety Board says a team of international investigators has completed a preliminary analysis of the data from the flight recorders of the Ukrainian passenger jet shot down by Iran in January.

Analysis of Ukraine flight black boxes complete

Quebec tourists 'invade' Gaspe beaches

Quebec tourists 'invade' Gaspe beaches
Quebec's annual two-week construction holiday is in full swing, and with many Quebecers staying closer to home this summer because of COVID-19, towns in the Gaspe region are seeing an influx of tourists drawn to the charming seaside landscapes.

Quebec tourists 'invade' Gaspe beaches

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case
The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that a class-action lawsuit taking aim at video lottery terminals cannot proceed, saying Friday the claims made in the case are bound to fail.

Top court nixes video lottery terminal case